Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-mlc7c Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-03T01:54:35.609Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Prepaid tickets to the New World: the New York Continental Conference and transatlantic steerage Fares 1885–1895*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 January 2010

Torsten Feys
Affiliation:
European University Institutea

Abstract

This article surveys the situation of the shipping cartels (conferences) which regulated transatlantic migrant transport from the European Continent to the United States. The focus of the article is to identify the internal and external pressures underlying these agreements and the strategies employed to neutralize these pressures. The author reaches the conclusion that a pool agreement was essential for the effectiveness of the Conference, which was both a means of horizontal integration regulating the competition between shipping companies and a means of vertical integration to gain control over the transatlantic migrant agent network selling the ocean passage tickets. The author also correlates the efficiency of the agreements with steerage fares and migration costs.

Resumen

Este artículo examina la situación de los cárteles del transporte naviero (conferencias) que regularon el transporte migratorio transatlántico del continente europeo a los Estados Unidos. El objetivo del artículo es identificar las presiones internas y externas subyacentes a estos acuerdos, así como las estrategias empleadas para neutralizar estas presiones. El autor llega a la conclusión de que un acuerdo sobre la división del mercado en quatos (market shares) era esencial para la eficacia de la Conferencia, que era al mismo tiempo una forma de integración horizontal que regulaban la competencia entre las compañías de transporte naviero, así como una integración vertical para obtener el control sobre la red de agentes transatlánticos de venta de billetes a la emigración. El autor correlaciona también la eficacia de los acuerdos con las tarifas para emigrantes y los costes de la migración.

Type
Articles/Artículos
Copyright
Copyright © Instituto Figuerola de Historia y Ciencias Sociales, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid 2008

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Aldcroft, D., (1974): Studies in British transport history, 1870–1970. London.Google Scholar
Bastin, R., (1971): «Cunard and the Liverpool emigrant traffic 1860–1900». Unpublished Master thesis: University of Liverpool.Google Scholar
Boyce, G., (1995): Information, mediation and institutional development: The rise of large scale enterprise in British Shipping 1870–1919. Manchester.Google Scholar
Brattne, B., (1976): «The Importance of the Transport Sector for Mass Migration», in Norman, H. and Runblom, H. (Eds.) From Sweden to America a history of the migration. Minneapolis, pp. 176200.Google Scholar
Broeze, F., (1991): «Albert Ballin, The Hamburg-Bremen rivalry and the dynamics of the Conference system». The International Journal of Maritime History, 3 (1), pp 132.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Day, J., (2002): «Credit, Capital and Community: Informal Banking in immigrant communities in the United States 1880–1924». Financial History Review, 9 (1), pp. 6578.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Deakin, B., and Seward, T., (1973): Shipping Conferences: a study of their origins, development and Economic practices. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Deltas, G., Sefres, K., and Sicotte, R., (1999): «American Shipping Cartels in Pre World War I Era». Research in Economic History, 19 (1), pp. 138.Google Scholar
Engelsing, R., (1961): Bremen als Auswandererhafen 1683–1880. Bremen.Google Scholar
Evans, N., (2007): «The role of foreign-born agents in the development of mass migration through Britain, 1820–1923», in Feys, T., Fisher, L., Hoste, S and Vanfraechem, S. (Eds.) Maritime Transport and Migration: The Connections between Maritime and Migration Networks. St Johns, Newfoundland, pp. 4962.Google Scholar
Feys, T., (2007): «Where all Passenger Liners meet: New York as a Nodal Point for the Transatlantic Migrant Trade». The International Journal of Maritime History, 19 (2), pp. 245272.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Flayhart, W., (1998): «The expansions of American interests in Transatlantic Commerce and trade 1865–1893», in Starkey, D. and Harlafits, G. (Eds.) Global Markets: The internationalization of the sea transport industries since 1850. St Johns, Newfoundland, pp. 127147.Google Scholar
Flayhart, W., (2000): The American Line 1872–1902. New York.Google Scholar
Gelberg, B., (1973): Auswanderung nach Übersee:Soziale Probleme der Auswanderungbeförderung in Hamburg und Bremen von der Mitte der 19. Jahrhunderts bis zum Ersten Weltkrieg. Hamburg.Google Scholar
Genesove, D., and Mullin, P., (2001): «Rules, Communication and Collusion: Narrative evidence from the Sugar Institute Case». The American Economic Review 91 (3), pp. 379398.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Greenhill, R., (1998): «Competition or cooperation the Global Shipping Industry: The origins and impact of the Conference system for British Shipowners before 1914», in Starkey, D. and Harlafits, G. (eds.), Global Markets: The internationalization of the sea transport industries since 1850. St John, Newfoundland, pp. 5379.Google Scholar
Harley, K., (1988): «Ocean freight rates and productivity: 1740–1913: The primacy of mechanical invention reaffirmed», Journal of Economic History, 48 (4), pp. 851876.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harley, K., (1990): «North Atlantic Shipping in the Late Nineteenth Century: Freight rates and the interrelationship of cargoes», in Fischer, L. and Nordvik, H. (eds.), Shipping and Trade 1750–1950. Leuven.Google Scholar
Huldermann, B., (1922): Albert Ballin. Berlin.Google Scholar
Hvidt, K., (1978): «Emigration Agents: The development of a business and its methods». Scandinavian Journal of History, 3 (2), pp. 178202.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hyde, F., (1975): Cunard and the North Atlantic 1840–1973: A history of shipping and financial management. New Jersey.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keeling, D., (1999a): «The Transport Revolution in the Transatlantic Migration 1850–1914». Research in Economic History, 19 (1), pp. 3974.Google Scholar
Keeling, D., (1999b): «Transatlantic Shipping cartels and migration between Europe and America 1880–1914». Essays in Economic and Business History, 17 (2), pp. 195213.Google Scholar
Keeling, D., (2007): «Costs, Risks, and Migration Networks between Europe and the United States,» 19001914, in Feys, T., Fisher, L., Hoste, S and Vanfraechem, S. (eds.), Maritime Transport and Migration: The Connections between Maritime and Migration Networks. St Johns, Newfoundland, pp. 113173.Google Scholar
Murken, E., (1922): Die grossen transatlantischen Linienreederei-Verbande, Pools und Interessengemeinschaften bis zum Ausbruch des Weltkrieges: Ihre Entstehung, Organitsation und Wirksamkeit. Jena.Google Scholar
North, D., (1958): «Ocean freight rates and economical development: 1740–1913». Journal of Economic History, 48 (4), pp. 538555.Google Scholar
Osborne, D., (1976): «Cartel Problems». The American Historic Review, 66 (5), pp. 835844.Google Scholar
Ottmuller-Wetzel, B., (1986): «Auswanderung über Hamburg: Die HAPAG und die Auswanderung nach Nordamerika 1870–1914». Unpublished master thesis, Freien Universitat Berlin.Google Scholar
Pirrong, S., (1992): «An application of Core theory to the Analysis of Ocean shipping markets». Journal of Law and Economics, 35 (1), pp. 89131.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Safford, J., (1985): «The decline of the American merchant marine 1850–1914: A historiographical appraisal», in Fischer, L. and Panting, G. (Eds.) Change and adaptation in maritime History: The North Atlantic fleets in the 19th century. St Johns, Newfoundland.Google Scholar
Sicotte, R., (1997): «Competition and Cartels in Liner Shipping Industry. A Historical Perspective», in Olsson, Ulf (Ed.) Business and European Integration since 1800. Goteborg.Google Scholar
Sjostrom, W., (2004): «The Stability of Ocean shipping Cartels», in Grossman, P. (ed.) How Cartels endure and how they fail. Cheltenham.Google Scholar
Sloan, E., (1998): «First and very secret international shipping cartel 1850–1856» in Starkey, D. and Harlafits, G. (eds.), Global Markets: The internationalization of the sea transport industries since 1850. St John, Newfoundland, pp. 3152Google Scholar
Sloan, E. (1992): «Collins versus Cunard: The Realities of a North Atlantic Steamship rivalry 1850–58». The International Journal of Maritime History, 4 (1), pp. 83100.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stigler, G., (1964): «A Theory of Oligopoly». Journal of Political Economy, 72 (1), 1964, pp. 4461.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Der Valk, L., (1976): «Landverhuizers via Rotterdam in de negentiende eeuw», in Economisch en Sociaal-Historisch jaarboek. Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Vannoise-Pochulu, M. De, (1993): «La politique de la Compagnie Générale Transatlantique et l'émigration vers les Etats-Unis à partir du Havre (1875–1914)». Unpublished Master thesis, Paris XII University.Google Scholar
Ville, S., (1990): Transport and the devolopment of the European Economy 1750–1918. London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wadhwani, R., (2002): «Banking from the bottom up: the case of migrant savers at the Philadelphia Saving Fund Society at the late 19th Century». Financial History Review, 9 (1), pp. 4163.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williamson, J.; Hatton, T., and O'rourke, K., (1994): «Mass migration, commodity market integration and real wage convergence: the late nineteenth century Atlantic economy», in Wiliamson, J. and Hattan, T. (eds.), International labour market integration and the impact of migration on the national labour markets since 1870. Milan.Google Scholar
Williamson, J., and Hatton, T. (1998): The Age of Mass Migration: Causes and Economic Impact. Oxford.Google Scholar
Wurstenbecker, K., (2003): «Hamburg and the transit of east Europeans», in Fahrmeir, A., Faron, O. and Weil, P. (Eds.), Migration Control in the North Atlantic World. New York.Google Scholar